Craig retroazimuthal projection

Retroazimuthal compromise map projection
Craig retroazimuthal projection centered on Mecca

The Craig retroazimuthal map projection was created by James Ireland Craig in 1909. It is a modified cylindrical projection. As a retroazimuthal projection, it preserves directions from everywhere to one location of interest that is configured during construction of the projection. The projection is sometimes known as the Mecca projection because Craig, who had worked in Egypt as a cartographer, created it to help Muslims find their qibla. In such maps, Mecca is the configurable location of interest.[1]

Given latitude φ to plot, latitude φ0 of the fixed location of interest, longitude λ to plot, and the longitude λ0 of the fixed location of interest, the projection is defined by:

x = λ λ 0 y = λ λ 0 sin ( λ λ 0 ) ( sin φ cos ( λ λ 0 ) tan φ 0 cos φ ) {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}x&=\lambda -\lambda _{0}\\y&={\frac {\lambda -\lambda _{0}}{\sin \left(\lambda -\lambda _{0}\right)}}{\Big (}\sin \varphi \cos \left(\lambda -\lambda _{0}\right)-\tan \varphi _{0}\cos \varphi {\Big )}\end{aligned}}}

But when λ − λ0 = 0, y above is undefined, so instead use the ratio's continuous completion:[2]

y = sin φ cos ( λ λ 0 ) tan φ 0 cos φ = sin φ tan φ 0 cos φ {\displaystyle y=\sin \varphi \cos \left(\lambda -\lambda _{0}\right)-\tan \varphi _{0}\cos \varphi =\sin \varphi -\tan \varphi _{0}\cos \varphi }

See also

References

  1. ^ Lev M Bugayevskiy; John Parr Snyder (1995). Map Projections: A Reference Manual. Bristol: Taylor and Francis. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-7484-0303-5.
  2. ^ John Parr Snyder (1993). Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections. pp. 227–228. ISBN 0-226-76747-7.

Further reading

  • Tobler, Waldo (2002). "Qibla, and Related, Map Projections". Cartography and Geographic Information Science. 29 (1): 17–23. doi:10.1559/152304002782064574. ISSN 1523-0406.

External links

  • An interactive Java Applet to study the metric deformations of the Craig Projection.
  • Biography of James Ireland Craig (1868-1952).
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Map projection
Cylindrical
Mercator-conformal
Equal-area
Pseudocylindrical
Equal-area
Conical
Pseudoconical
Azimuthal
(planar)
General perspective
Pseudoazimuthal
Conformal
Equal-area
Bonne
Bottomley
Cylindrical
Tobler hyperelliptical
Equidistant in
some aspect
Gnomonic
Loxodromic
Retroazimuthal
(Mecca or Qibla)
Compromise
Hybrid
Perspective
Planar
Polyhedral
See also